Just showed up to this thread. Just looking through the last page and it smells just like the 375 thread. Lol
Just showed up to this thread. Just looking through the last page and it smells just like the 375 thread. Lol
Just showed up to this thread. Just looking through the last page and it smells just like the 375 thread. Lol

Why would one have to shoot anything with the 6.5 creedmoor or the 260 rem to figure out which one will kill any better when the ballistics are the same? One of the cartridges has a better design for shooting long bullets for long range precision shooting.Is that the thread where one cartridge is superior based on internet chit-chat. However the proponents have never actually shot anything with it?
That smells alright…![]()
Exactly, the same or similar. Not better. And this is the hunting thread. I didn’t see any 1000 yrd groups from anyone as it would be irrelevant here.
So if you want to do both hunting and target then the creedmoor has the advantage.
Most big game hunting cartridges are capable of taking game farther out than most of us are capable of shooting accurately. I would say the 6.5 Creedmoor is capable of taking deer size game out to 500 yds or maybe more. That doesn't mean the guy behind the trigger is capable of it though. We would have to start another thread on ability and ethics. Myself, if the conditions were right, 400 yds would be a long poke. I hunt deer with a 270 win. I save my long shots for paper targets. Too much can go wrong at long range IMO. The cartridges I hunt with are capable of taking game cleanly at longer range than I'm comfortable shooting at.Are you suggesting either of these calibers would be a good long range hunting choice?
Where would the best 6.5 bullet still be retaining the 1000 or 1200 lbs of energy usually considered sufficient for deer? If you were moa from the bench, what would be you accuracy in the field? The question is were is the intersection of caliber capability, shooter ability, and personal ethics?
Bartell gets load development duty. Yeeeooooo
Most big game hunting cartridges are capable of taking game farther out than most of us are capable of shooting accurately. I would say the 6.5 Creedmoor is capable of taking deer size game out to 500 yds or maybe more. That doesn't mean the guy behind the trigger is capable of it though. We would have to start another thread on ability and ethics. Myself, if the conditions were right, 400 yds would be a long poke. I hunt deer with a 270 win. I save my long shots for paper targets. Too much can go wrong at long range IMO. The cartridges I hunt with are capable of taking game cleanly at longer range than I'm comfortable shooting at.
Nobody cares...
Brush your teeth...
weird auto correct. I'll post my results, and I'm sure you'll click on the thread




























